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from · 2020. 12. 20. · AnnabelleLee, comedy teamDolores Claman and Paul Elsom, and dancer PaulineRoss. From Toronto. CBWT—How About That! This week Jim Mitchell presents a Christmas

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Page 1: from · 2020. 12. 20. · AnnabelleLee, comedy teamDolores Claman and Paul Elsom, and dancer PaulineRoss. From Toronto. CBWT—How About That! This week Jim Mitchell presents a Christmas

December 20 - 26

lighted to welcome Juliette who willrepresent British Columbia in thefirst of the cross-the-week greetingsin music.

P.M. PartyAudience - participation program

for women, with emcee Alan Millar,vocalists Donna Miller and AllanBlye, announcer Rex Loring, andRudy Toth’s orchestra. Today’s guestsare dancers BB and Gordon. Donnaplays a Christmas shopper in a sea-sonal skit about the joys of gift-hunt-ing. From Toronto.

Let’s LookThis week Let’s Look at Snow.

Program shows how snow can be fun,useful, and dangerous. Among thesnow subjects illustrated are snow-balls, igloos, glaciers, the structure ofa snowflake, coasting, and blizzards.Science All Around Us

This week Know Your ChristmasTree. Viewers will learn how to iden-tify the different varieties of Christ-mas trees, how to care for a treeindoors, and how to take safetymeasures to prevent fire.Youth ’6O

Today a Christmas party, with18-year-old pianist Diana McCreathof Toronto; 14-year-old pop singerRichard Prew of Hull, Quebec;dancer Joey Hollingsworth, sopranoAnnabelle Lee, comedy team DoloresClaman and Paul Elsom, and dancerPauline Ross. From Toronto.CBWT—How About That!

This week Jim Mitchell presents aChristmas program. He visits Toylandin a large department store, chatswith some tiny tots, and shows filmson Christmas in Sweden and Toys ofTomorrow. The latter film showssuch toys as a teen-age doll with eyesthat follow one about the room, andan army truck that launches flyingmissiles at enemy planes projected onthe wall. From Winnipeg.

Don Messer’s JubileeGuest on this week’s show is

dancer Marlene Weatherbee. TheIslanders will play Back to the SugarCamp, Victor-Boys Breakdown, andBig John McNeill. Marg Osbume willsing Christmas Polka, The Holy Child,and Here Comes Santa Claus. CharlieChamberlain will sing Winter Won-derland, and Marg and Charlie’sduets will be Silver Bells and SilentNight. The Buchta Dancers performto Loggers’ Breakdown and Christ-mas Jig, and pianist Waldo Munrooffers a solo—Silver Bell. From Hali-fax.

CHRISTMAS TOYSOne of the most pleasant jobs CBCsinging star Juliette will have thisChristmas is collecting toys for under-privileged children. On Dec. 19Juliette will have a special Christmasshow with her audience bringing toysas admission. Juliette will be a guest

on “Open House” this Monday.

Danny Thomas ShowFamily comedy show starring Danny

Thomas as a New York entertainerand family man.

RiverboatStarring Darren McGavin and Burt

as captain and river pilot of theEnterprise.Music ’6O

This week—The Jack Kane Hour.Jack Kane and Sylvia Murphy wel-come singer George Murray and thestars of Music ’6o’s “Hit Parade”—Joyce Hahn and Wally Koster. Sylviasings “I’ve Got My Love to Keep MeWarm”; Talent Caravan host Murraysings “The Whiffenpoof Song”; andthe Music Makers play Leroy Ander-son’s “Sleigh Ride.” The entire castparticipates in a Christmas medleywhich includes The Christmas Song,Silver Bells and Christmas in Kil-lamey. From Toronto.The Town Above

Roger Lemelin’s serial about aFrench-Canadian family living be-yond its means in the “upper-town”district of Quebec City. From Mon-treal.CBWT—Happyland

Tonight the Van Dorn Sisters,former Winnipeggers, make the firstof two visits to Happyland Park. Alsofeatured are singers Kerr Wilson andDonna Andert and Jake Park’s polkaband. Ernest Mutimer, producer.

DAG HAMMARSKJOLD(Continued from page 6)

or other of the Great Power camps.She refused to join NATO andtried to persuade Norway and Den-mark to stay out by offering them asubstitute Scandinavian pact. Onthe other hand, when Russianplanes shot down a Swedish planeover the Baltic, Hammarskjoldhimself, then temporarily in chargeof the Swedish Foreign Office,sent three stinging notes to theRussians. It is no doubt this refusalto back down to anyone that madea Swede, and Hammarskjold inparticular, acceptable to all thepowers.

Hammarskjold has a friendlymanner. But he has the reputationof having a coldly intellectualmind combined, perhaps paradox-ically, with a streak of mysticism.He is a mountaineer and fond ofexploring Arctic Lapland, an ad-mirer of the scholar-missionarySchweitzer, and a pupil of Keynesthe economist. His reading takes inJoyce, Proust and Rilke.

Publicity is obnoxious to Ham-marskjold and it is said he prefersthe orderliness of backroom di-plomacy to the flambouyant ges-ture in the public place. One thingis certain: international tensionwill never rise because of Ham-marskjold saying anything he didnot want to say. At one press con-ference he remarked, “I may belearning more from this than youare.” And any reporter who hasattended a Hammarskjold pressconference looking for lively copywould probably agree.

“As soon as you are genuinelymoved in the theatre or by a workof art it is personal, and you have

no possibility of escape. Just to watcha story going on and not know thatyou exist or you are there because

you’re so interested in the story, thatis escapism. But great art never does

that. Great art always, somehow orother, brings a larger consciousness of

oneself and one’s relation to every-thing, because great art is always

related to everything.” MichaelMacOuxm, Principal of London

Academy of Music and DramaticArt, speaking on BBC.

Page Eleven